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Four found dead inside Aurora home, including gunman shot by police

Investigators enter a townhome that was the scene of a multiple shooting in Aurora, Colorado, on the morning of Saturday, Jan. 5, 2013. Four poeple were killed including the gunman. (Karl Gehring, The Denver Post)

AURORA — In what police officers called "the worst-case scenario," four people were found shot dead at a townhome Saturday, including the gunman, who repeatedly fired at officers during a six-hour standoff.

After several hours of negotiations, during which the gunman repeatedly hung up on officers and ignored their pleas to come out of the home, Aurora SWAT officers shot at the man after he opened fire from a second-story window.

Officers entered the home to find two men and a woman fatally shot on the first floor of the home. The gunman was found dead upstairs, said Cassidee Carlson, spokeswoman for the Aurora Police Department.

Police could not confirm Saturday what type of gun the man was using or how many weapons were involved.

A woman is consoled by a young man at the scene of shooting at an Aurora townhome Saturday, Jan. 5, 2013. The bodies of four people, including a gunman are dead at the scene following a standoff situation early Saturday morning. (Andy Cross, The Denver Post)

Police were first called to the two-story residence, located in the 16000 block of East Ithaca Place, shortly before 3 a.m. by a woman who had escaped by jumping from an upstairs back window.

The woman, whom neighbors and family members later identified as the gunman's wife, Stephanie Philbrook Archuletta, met officers outside when they arrived.

The woman reported seeing three "lifeless" bodies before she escaped uninjured. She later characterized her husband to police as being mentally ill, according to another police source. Police are also investigating the possibility that the gunman was using methamphetamine.

Within minutes, officers surrounded the townhome. Neighbors awoke to noises they described as "explosions" and "screams."

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"I've never been so scared in my life," said Michael Ignace, who was awakened by the sound of a police bullhorn and commotion. Ignace lives in the corner unit of the six-unit building where the shootings took place.

Authorities have not officially named the gunman, but neighbors and other sources have identified him as Sonny Archuleta, 33. The names of the dead have not been released, but multiple sources confirmed they are his father-in-law, Anthony Ticali, his sister-in-law, Stacie Philbrook, and her boyfriend.

Officers did not hear gunshots until about 8 a.m., when the gunman opened fire at SWAT officers as they, from an armored vehicle, smashed a first-floor front window of the residence. Police did not return fire, but several of the gunman's rounds struck the vehicle.

Throughout the standoff, police intermittently tried to negotiate with the gunman, who was piling furniture and possessions against the doors to barricade himself inside. The gunman answered his phone several times, Carlson said, but his conversation was unintelligible, and he sounded agitated.

Shaunna Bustios, who lives across the street from the townhome, said she repeatedly heard police officers yelling through a bullhorn or intercom system to try to coax the man down.

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"Sonny, come downstairs. Sonny, we have your wife. Sonny, come out and we'll get you the help you need," Bustios recalled police telling the man.

Jennifer Williams, who lives adjacent to the home, said she watched the incident from her garage and upstairs. She also heard police communicating with "Sonny."

"We know you've been up for four days. What's done is done. Come out and we'll get you some help," Williams quoted police as calling out on the bullhorn.

Police kept asking Sonny to allow them to help "Anthony, Chris and Stacie," and urging him to come outside to speak with his wife, Williams said.

About 8:20 a.m., officers fired tear gas canisters into the home, but the gunman did not come out.

Police at the scene of a multiple shooting in Aurora, Colorado, on the morning of Saturday, Jan. 5, 2013. Four poeple were killed including the gunman. (Andy Cross, The Denver Post)

Less than an hour later, about 9 a.m., the man appeared in a second-story window and began firing at police. Officers returned fire and saw him fall back. It has not been confirmed whether the gunman died from police fire.

Throughout Saturday, investigators continued to work at the townhome, where red and silver Christmas ornaments dangled among the crumpled blinds in the shattered window. Two baseball-sized holes could be seen in one of the upstairs windows.

Authorities are interviewing the woman who escaped the home to determine what triggered the shootings. It was unclear whether there had been a struggle, and investigators have not confirmed the relationship among the four people.

According to state records, Archuleta had three previous charges for weapons offenses, including a prohibited use of a weapon in Federal Heights in 2004 and carrying a concealed weapon in Denver in June.

Archuleta's LinkedIn account says he is a freelance artist who specializes in animation, landscape design, concept art and texturing. According to the account, he attended the University of Colorado between 2007 and 2010.

For the past three years, Archuleta has helped run a boutique for infants and toddlers. Before that, he was the director of Step Up Inc., a faith-based life-skills workshop and recovery-support agency that focused on overcoming hopelessness, his profile says.

In the early hours of Sept. 3, 2011, Archuleta's brother, Patricio, 34, was shot to death in the parking lot of MGM's Restaurant and Lounge in west Denver. Patricio, who had a criminal record of drug and assault charges, was released from prison in 2008 after serving 15 months for obstructing public peace and order and vehicular eluding.

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